in the case reese utley, george clooney and darfur were actually getting arrested and publicized in that issue. but chaplin practiced what he call visual polity. that is he was actually very shy. it was the most famous celebrity in the world who claim that every time he has to speak in public he would throw out before hand. and so he preferred to put his politics directly on the screen and in his early film, throughout his career, but he did was what i call it antiauthoritarian politics. he slammed all authority figures are mainly those who gave working-class people a hard time from employers to form intimate to world figures like many the mussolini and adolf hitler. and because he owned his own company as he was both producer, here, right here, start, composer for the score and eventually distribute or come he could do anything he wanted to do. no studio hatchet on what he could or couldn't do. so he put his politics directly on the screen. by the 1930s he began to get much more overtly political and by the 1940s when he made the great tater, which was the first really the first america